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>

>BBC DAILY E-MAIL: UK EDITION

>Thursday, 17 March, 2005, 9:00 GMT 01:00 -08:00:US/Pacific

>

>

>SCIENCE/NATURE

>

> * New Asian quake threat warning *

>A stress build-up on faults in Sumatra after the

>Indonesian earthquake is likely to trigger

>another large quake and maybe a tsunami.

>Full story:

>http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4354217.stm

 

New Asian quake threat warning

 

By Paul Rincon

BBC News science reporter

A build-up of stress on faults in Sumatra

following the Indonesian earthquake is likely to

trigger another large quake and perhaps a tsunami.

 

That is the claim made in Nature by a team from the University of Ulster, UK.

 

The slip that caused last year's devastating

quake placed increased stress on the Sumatran

fault and on the adjacent undersea Sunda Trench.

 

A new rupture could trigger a magnitude 7-7.5

quake on land and a magnitude 8-8.5 quake beneath

the sea, they say.

 

The 2004 earthquake occurred when the deep, flat

Indian plate slipped under the Burma plate.

 

Major earthquakes tend to cluster in these

subduction zones where two or more plates of the

Earth's crust grind and overlap.

 

When a quake takes place, the displacement

causes the surrounding crust to become distorted.

This places stress on other fault lines and

structures in the area.

 

Researchers from the University of Ulster at

Coleraine used information about displacement

following December's magnitude 9.0 quake to

calculate the stresses it placed on the

surrounding region.

 

Stress zone

 

They concentrated on the Sumatran fault, a

so-called " strike-slip " fault which cuts through

the island of Sumatra, and the Sunda trench, a

continuation of the underwater subduction zone

that ruptured to cause the tsunami last year.

 

" We found that both of them had been

significantly loaded, in stress terms, by the 26

December quake, " said lead author John McCloskey.

 

Their results show a stress increase of up to

five bars in the 50km stretch of the Sunda trench

located next to the rupture zone. They show an

increase of up to nine bars for about 300km on

the Sumatra fault near the city of Banda Aceh.

 

Based on these findings, the scientists predict

a possible magnitude 7-7.5 earthquake on the

Sumatran fault and a magnitude 8-8.5 quake at the

Sunda trench.

 

" The huge changes in stress mean that I am

comfortable talking about a significant increase

in the risk of another quake. But that is as far

as I am prepared to go, " Professor McCloskey told

the BBC News website.

 

The researchers stop short of predicting when

another large quake will strike the region. But

similar events elsewhere in the world have

occurred within a few years of each other, or

even a few months.

 

Another tsunami?

 

In Japan, at least five major quakes in the

Nankaido segment of the Nankai subduction zone

have been accompanied by similar events on the

linked Tonankai/Tokai segment within five years -

and three of the subsequent quakes ruptured in

the same years as their precursors.

 

The magnitude 7.4 Izmit earthquake in Turkey in

1999 triggered the magnitude 7.1 Duzce earthquake

three months later. Worryingly, the Anatolian

fault - where these quakes occurred - has a very

similar structure to the Sumatran fault.

 

Some researchers believe large earthquakes occur

at the Sunda trench on a cycle of 200 years,

which is determined by stress loading at the

subduction zone. The last big event occurred

about 150 years ago, but Professor McCloskey said

the recent quake could have accelerated this

cycle.

 

" The amount of extra stress could be equivalent

to 50 or 60 years of loading. But I personally am

not convinced by this theory, " he said.

 

A large earthquake at the undersea Sunda trench

had the potential to cause another tsunami, the

University of Ulster researcher added.

 

But Professor Nick Ambraseys of Imperial College

London, UK, expressed concern about the Nature

report:

 

" False alarms and inaccurate timing could create

more problems than already exist, " he said.

 

" There is nothing in their article that enables,

with any degree of certainty, the prediction of

the immediacy of the next earthquake. "

 

The authors of the research paper say this makes

a tsunami early warning system for the Indian

Ocean all the more urgent.

 

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4354217.stm

 

Published: 2005/03/16 18:22:44 GMT

 

© BBC MMV

 

--

 

 

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